-
Main menu
- Sign in
Government Medical College, Parbhani is understood to be a public medical institution associated with the city of Parbhani in the Marathwada region of the Indian state of Maharashtra. As a member of the broader cohort of government medical colleges in India, it would typically be expected to offer undergraduate medical education leading to the MBBS degree, and to be linked with a teaching hospital that provides clinical training as well as healthcare services to the surrounding population. However, specific operational details — including the year of establishment, the exact campus location, sanctioned intake, affiliating university, regulatory approvals, and the structure of any attached hospital — must be independently verified by editors before being included in the published article.
This draft is intended as a scaffold for IndiaWiki editors. It deliberately avoids asserting unverified particulars such as dates, names of office bearers, departmental lists, ranking claims, fee structures, or admission statistics. Instead, it sets out neutral context about the cohort to which the institution belongs, identifies the categories of information that a complete encyclopaedia entry should cover, and flags the points where careful sourcing is required. Editors should treat every factual gap as an invitation to consult primary documents and reputable secondary reporting before finalising the article.
Government medical colleges in India are typically established by state governments, often in partnership with central schemes intended to expand access to medical education and tertiary healthcare. Such institutions are usually regulated by the National Medical Commission (which succeeded the Medical Council of India in 2020) and are commonly affiliated with a state health sciences university — in the case of Maharashtra, often the Maharashtra University of Health Sciences, Nashik. Admissions to MBBS seats at these colleges generally follow the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET-UG) framework, with state-level counselling administered by designated authorities.
Parbhani is a district headquarters in central Maharashtra and serves as a regional centre for adjoining rural areas. The establishment of a government medical college in such a district is consistent with broader policy aims of decentralising specialist medical training and improving healthcare delivery beyond major metropolitan centres. Editors preparing this article should determine whether the college was set up as an entirely new institution, whether it grew out of an existing district or civil hospital, and what its current functional status is. The exact administrative chain — including the relevant state department, dean's office, and any associated trust or society — should be confirmed against official notifications before being described in the final article.
A government medical college in a district like Parbhani may carry significance on several fronts: as a centre of medical education contributing to the supply of qualified doctors in Maharashtra; as the host of a teaching hospital that can provide secondary and possibly tertiary healthcare to a largely rural catchment; and as an institution that can support public health programmes, outbreak response, and medical research relevant to local conditions. The presence of such a college can also have indirect effects on the local economy, on the availability of allied health services, and on referral patterns within the regional health system.
That said, editors should resist the temptation to overstate the institution's role without documentary support. Claims about patient load, the breadth of specialties offered, research output, or community impact must be tied to verifiable sources such as government reports, university gazettes, or credible news coverage. Where the institution is relatively new or still developing, it is appropriate for the article to acknowledge that scope and capacity may be evolving, while avoiding speculation about future expansion that has not been formally announced.
The following list identifies categories of information that readers will reasonably expect to find in an article about a government medical college, and that therefore require careful verification before inclusion:
Each of these items should be cross-checked against at least one authoritative source, and ideally two, before being incorporated. Where information is unavailable or contested, the article should either omit the point or note the uncertainty in neutral language.
Once verified material has been gathered, editors may consider organising the published article along the following lines, adjusted as evidence permits:
This draft has been prepared without access to verified primary sources for the specific institution, and is therefore intentionally cautious. Editors are urged to keep the following considerations in mind:
Once sourced material is in hand, this scaffold can be progressively replaced with substantive, cited prose, and the editor-facing notes removed before publication.
No references are cited in this draft, as it is a pre-publication scaffold rather than a finished article. Editors are expected to add citations to authoritative sources, which may include but are not limited to: official communications from the Government of Maharashtra and its Department of Medical Education and Drugs; the National Medical Commission's official college listings and approval notices; the Maharashtra University of Health Sciences and its public records; Government of India schemes relating to medical education expansion; and reporting in established Indian newspapers and news agencies. Each substantive factual claim added to the article should be supported by at least one such source, with preference given to primary or official documents wherever available.